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角色累积与生命历程中的心理健康

Role-Accumulation and Mental Health across the Life Course

American Sociological Review · 2025
被引 6
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

利用21年澳大利亚纵向数据,研究发现强制性角色累积在大多数年龄段有益心理健康,但晚年效果减弱;而自愿性角色累积在所有年龄段都有益,尤其对老年人心理健康作用显著。

Abstract

Decades of research shows that holding and maintaining multiple social roles leads to better mental health and well-being overall, but role-accumulation theory has not proposed or considered whether effects vary at different stages in the life course. Rather, the current theory assumes that social roles’ positive influence on mental health should be similar at all ages. In addition, extant work suggests that accumulating roles that are more voluntary than obligatory is the best strategy for mental health, regardless of age. In contrast, socioemotional selectivity theory suggests that in later life, adults tend to reduce their number of social roles, especially voluntary ones, as a strategy to maximize mental health. Using 21 waves/years of longitudinal data on Australian adults, we examine the effect of role-accumulation across the entire adult life course. Fixed-effects models show that the types of roles matter, with obligatory role-accumulation associated with better mental health at most ages, but not in late adulthood. In contrast, voluntary role-accumulation is beneficial at all ages, and especially for the mental health of older adults. The findings mostly support role-accumulation theory’s predictions and highlight the importance of voluntary roles for lifelong well-being. Our results suggest that creating more voluntary role opportunities that are accessible to all ages can benefit older individuals, communities, and population health more broadly.

生命历程心理健康社会角色发展心理学